A
lost war?
Robert Jensen
School of Journalism
University of Texas
Austin, TX 78712
work: (512) 471-1990
fax: (512) 471-7979
rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu
copyright Robert Jensen 2004
The Hindu, December 19, 2004.
by Robert Jensen
The United States
has lost the war in Iraq,
and that’s a good thing.
By that I don’t mean that the loss of American and
Iraqi
lives is to be celebrated. The death and destruction are numbingly
tragic, and
the suffering in Iraq
is
hard for most of us in the United States to
comprehend. The tragedy is
compounded because these deaths haven’t protected Americans or brought
freedom
to Iraqis -- they have come in the quest to extend the American empire
in this
so-called “new American century,” as some right-wing ideologues have
named our
future.
So, as a U.S.
citizen, I welcome the U.S.
defeat, for a simple reason: It isn’t the defeat of the United States
-- its people or their ideals -- but of that empire. And it’s essential
the
American empire be defeated and dismantled.
Making that statement in the United States, as I
often have
done over the past year, guarantees that one will be attacked as a
traitor by
those on the center and the right; in their world, to oppose any U.S.
military
action is by definition treason because, in their world, the U.S.
military is
always on the side of truth, freedom, justice and democracy. These
people
condemn me, in the words of one who wrote to berate me, for engaging in
“constant introspection of what
you think are the flaws in America.”
For these people, whatever potential flaws there are in U.S.
society or
politics are so minor as to be meaningless, hence any critical moral
assessment
is wasted energy. Better to move forward boldly, they argue, lauding
George W.
Bush for exactly that.
But stating that level of intensity of opposition
to the U.S. assault
on Iraq
also opens one up to criticism from many liberals who complain that
such
remarks are callous; I’ve been scolded for not taking into
consideration the
feelings of Americans whose friends and loved ones serving in the
military are
at risk in Iraq.
Other liberals have argued that such blunt talk is ill-advised on
strategic
grounds; it will alienate the vast majority of Americans who
reflexively
support the U.S.
military for emotional reasons.
But now is precisely the time to make these kinds
of blunt
statements. The 2004 elections made it clear just how marginal the
anti-empire/global-justice movement in the United States
is at this moment in
history. There is no hope of success in watering down a message in a
vain quest
to accommodate the maximal number of people for a short-term campaign;
that
kind of attempt in the run-up to the U.S.
invasion of Iraq
failed.
Although the worldwide turnout for the mass
demonstrations
on Feb. 15, 2003, was inspiring, we shouldn’t delude ourselves about
the
composition of the crowds in the United States. Many of
those
anti-war demonstrators were motivated by simple hatred of the Bush
administration; if it had been a Democratic president taking us to war,
those
folks likely would have stayed home. Another segment of demonstrators
was there
not through the long-term work of organizing and public education, but
because
of a rejection of the Bush ideologues that was based more in a visceral
fear
than in analysis; without a connection to a movement, they disappeared
from
public protest once the bombs started falling. In my estimation, at
best only a
third of the people who participated in that mass mobilization had any
meaningful connection to an anti-empire/global-justice movement that
looked
beyond the moment.
So, there is no short-term strategy for victory
that makes
any sense if one takes seriously a left, anti-authoritarian political
project.
That doesn’t mean there is no hope for left politics in the United
States, but
only that we have to avoid naiveté and wishful thinking: We are
in a period of
movement building -- trying to identify a core group, radicalize and
clarify
the analysis, and begin the process of finding ways to speak to a
broader
public that is (1) intensely propagandized through a highly ideological
news
media to accept hyperpatriotic politics, and at the same time (2)
encouraged to
be politically passive and disengaged from meaningful participation.
That kind
of change can’t happen overnight. We are faced with the task of
literally
rebuilding U.S.
politics.
This isn’t an argument for self-indulgent
ideological purity
or dogmatism; in fact, just the reverse. It’s an argument for carefully
assessing where we are -- both in terms of the state of the power of
the empire
worldwide and of domestic U.S.
politics -- and charting a path that can do more than put forward an
argument
for a softer-and-gentler empire, a la John Kerry and the mainstream
Democrats.
That project, we can hope, is dead forever (though many Democrats hold
onto the
notion they can ride it back to power).
What is the message that the U.S.
left needs to refine? We have
to find a way to explain to people that the fact the Bush
administration says
we are fighting for freedom and democracy (having long ago abandoned
fictions
about weapons of mass destruction and terrorist ties) does not make it
so. We
must help U.S.
citizens look at the reality, no matter how painful. Iraq
is the place to start to
explain how this contemporary empire works.
The people of Iraq
are no doubt better off without Saddam Hussein’s despised regime, but
that does
not prove our benevolent intentions nor guarantee the United States will work to bring
meaningful
democracy to Iraq.
Throughout history, our support for democracies has depended on their
support
for U.S.
policy. When democratic governments follow an independent course, they
typically end up as targets of U.S.
power, military or economic. Ask Venezuela’s
Hugo Chavez or Haiti’s
Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
In Iraq,
the Bush administration invaded not to liberate but to extend and
deepen U.S.
domination. When Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld says the Iraq
war “has nothing to do with oil -- literally
nothing to do with it,” he is telling a complete lie. But when Bush
says, “We have no territorial ambitions; we don’t seek an empire,” he
is
telling a half-truth. The United States
doesn’t want to absorb Iraq
nor take direct possession of its oil. That’s not the way of empire
today --
it’s about control over the flow of oil and oil profits, not ownership.
Vice
President Dick Cheney hit on the truth when in 1990 (serving then as
secretary
of defense) he told the Senate Armed Services Committee: “Whoever
controls the
flow of Persian Gulf oil has a
stranglehold
not only on our economy but also on the other countries of the world as
well.”
So, in a
world that runs on oil, the nation that
controls the flow of oil has great strategic power. U.S.
policymakers want leverage over the economies of competitors -- Western Europe, Japan
and China
-- which are more dependent on Middle Eastern oil. Hence the
longstanding U.S.
policy of support for reactionary regimes (Saudi
Arabia), dictatorships (Iran under the Shah) and regional
military
surrogates (Israel),
aimed at maintaining control.
The Bush
administration has invested money and
lives in making Iraq
a
platform from which the United States
can project power -- from permanent U.S. bases, officials hope.
That
requires not the liberation of Iraq,
but its subordination. But most Iraqis don’t want to be subordinated,
which is
why the United
States
in some sense lost the war on the day it invaded; one lesson of
post-World War
II history is that occupying armies generate resistance that,
inevitably,
prevails over imperial power.
Most Iraqis are glad Hussein is gone, and most
want the United
States
gone. When we admit defeat and pull out -- not if, but when -- the fate
of
Iraqis depends in part on whether the United States (1) makes good on
legal and
moral obligations to pay reparations, and (2) allows international
institutions
to aid in creating a truly sovereign Iraq. We shouldn’t expect
politicians to
do either without pressure. An anti-empire movement -- the joining of
antiwar
forces with the movement to reject corporate globalization -- must help
create
that pressure. Failure will add to the suffering in Iraq
and more clearly mark the United States as a rogue
state and an impediment to
a just and peaceful world.
So, I talk openly in public about why I’m glad for
the U.S. military
defeat in Iraq,
but with
no joy in my heart. We should all carry a profound sense of sadness at
where
decisions made by U.S. policymakers -- not just the gang in power today
but a
string of Republican and Democratic administrations -- have left us,
the Iraqis
and the world. But that sadness should not keep Americans from pursuing
the
most courageous act of citizenship in the United States today:
Pledging to
dismantle the American empire.
Here is what U.S.
citizens have to come to terms with if the planet is to survive: The
planet’s
resources do not belong to the United States. The century
is not America’s.
We
own neither the world nor time. And if we don’t give up the quest -- if
we
don’t find our place in the world instead of on top of the world --
there is
little hope for a safe, sane, and sustainable future.
-----------------------------
Robert
Jensen is a journalism professor at the University of Texas at Austin,
a
founding member of the Nowar Collective, http://www.nowarcollective.com/,
and a member of the board of the Third Coast Activist Resource Center, http://thirdcoastactivist.org/.
He is the author of Citizens
of the Empire: The Struggle to Claim Our Humanity (City Lights
Books).
He can be reached at rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu.
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